PRACTICE DESCRIPTION
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LAW FIRM PRACTICE
AREA SUMMARY
Fund Formation
A fund is a collective investment scheme used for making investments in various equity or debt transactions. The
practice divides into both public and private deals.
Private Equity funds invest in the securities of companies that are not publicly owned or traded.
Venture Capital funds invest in start up companies that are thought to represent good growth potential. The fund
is an investment vehicle formed as a partnership or limited liability company where the general partner or managing
member manages the invested funds.
Clients are fund sponsors and investors, including private equity funds, hedgefunds, funds of funds, real estate funds,
distressed funds and secondary funds.
Attorneys who specialize in fund formation will utilize a combination of knowledge such as corporate, tax, securities
and ERISA law to evaluate, structure and negotiate manager-level transactions, such as seed capital investments
in alternative investment fund managers, the creation of asset managers through joint ventures, and spin-outs of
existing asset management teams (including proprietary trading desks).
The day-to-day work includes preparing oering materials, negotiation with prospective investors, preparing
partnership and LLC agreements, advising on and documenting management and compensation arrangements and
closing fund formation transactions.
Attorneys in this practice will advise fund clients on complex issues arising under US and international securities
and tax laws and ERISA to devise creative, cutting-edge structures to assist private investment fund sponsors in
anticipating and reacting to the dynamic and increasingly complex financial landscape, including creative liquidity
and withdrawal structures.
Attorneys are called upon to evaluate, structure and negotiate private equity-style investments (minority and
control), exit transactions (strategic sale, recapitalization, initial public oerings and merger and acquisition
transactions including joint ventures, stock and asset sales.
This is a project based practice that demands excellent detail-oriented and organizational skills in order to balance
negotiations between sophisticated parties.
Attorneys who are attracted to this practice enjoy working closely with their clients to navigate multiple business objectives.
General Corporate
What constitutes a general corporate practice varies by geography. New York/East Coast practice tends to focus more
on finance; Silicon Valley/West Coast practice tends to focus more on venture, securities, IPOs, start-up and high tech
counseling. New York attorneys tend to specialize more. There is more private company work on the West Coast.
A corporate generalist deals with a number of dierent practice areas and can often serve as an “outside general
counsel” to a firm.
Client relationships tend to be positive. Companies are glad to have your help and view you as part of the team
seeking to get the deal done.
Corporate law is a substantive field and you can become expert in it (most people say it takes 10 years).
The practice is collaborative in general, although direct negotiation can sometimes be adversarial.
People who like corporate practice tend to get satisfaction from helping companies grow and protect themselves. In
the grand scheme, corporate practice is a practice that deals with money.
People who don’t like corporate practice complain that they always have to think negatively (e.g., what could go
wrong here?) and do not to get satisfaction from the nebulous nature of the work or from helping corporations.
Investment (’40 Act)
An investment practice combines the corporate, tax, and ERISA practices.
The practice divides between registered and unregistered funds. For mutual funds (registered), both the Investment
Advisors Act and the Investment Companies Act apply. For hedge funds and private equity funds (unregistered),
only the Investment Advisors Act applies.
This practice is more prevalent in major markets. Secondary markets may have only a few firms that oer this practice.
Day-to-day work focuses on drafting and reviewing documents, negotiations, and answering clients questions. There
is not a lot of research after you become familiar with the Act.
Registered work involves SEC filings and can be somewhat repetitive. Unregistered work is slightly more complex,
involves tax issues, ERISA and allows more flexibility in structuring relationships (partnerships, LLCs, etc.).
Intense client contact and the deadlines can be short. It can be a high-stress practice and is best for people who
enjoy the service aspect of law.